Cleaning and polishing paper



March 29, 1932. H |s 1,851,811

CLEANING AND POLISHING PAPER Filed March 28. 1930 M VE/Vm"? mzwsss: e F05 r2 4,. 0/? la) er,

Patented Mar. 29, 1932 UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE ROBERT A, CHRISTIE, O]? GLENSIDE, PENNSYLVANIA, ASSIGNOR TO PAPERORAF'I' COR- POBATION, OF ELKINS PARK, PENNSYLVANIA, A CORPORATION OI PENN SYLVAN IA CLEANING AND POLISHING PAPER Ob'ects of the present invention are to provide or cleaning and polishing variousarticles, for example, eye-glasses; to provide a medium for that purpose which shall be comparatively inexpensive and yet efficient; and to provide such a medium in form and at a cost that will permit of its being bound up in the form of little booklets carrying advertisements and adapted to be given away.

In Other objects of the present invention will appear'from the following description at the end of which the invention will be claimed.

Generally stated. the invention consists of a sheet of crepe aper, tissue, kraft or' sul- 15 phite, having a, acially arranged cleaning compound, rouge, Bon Ami or the like, deposited and held in the folds of the crimps thereof and releasable by stretching the paper in use. One face of the paper may beplain or uncoated and used for polishing and the other face of the paper. may be impregnated or coated as described and used for cleaning along with -moisture, if desired, such as can be provided by breathing on the article to be cleaned.

The invention also comprises the im roveuse. As shown in Figs. 1 and 2 the other face of the paper is not coated and is available for polishing any surface that has been cleaned by the coated face. As shown in Fig. 3, both' faces of the paper are coated in the manner described.

- The coating may be deposited on the paper before or after it is crimped. The described paper may of course be used dry. The paper may be put up in the form of small booklets or in the form of rolls or sheets.

I claim:

1. As an article of manufacture a sheet of crepe paper having dry cleaning compound deposited and heldin the folds of the crimps polishing.

ROBERT A. CHRISTIE.

ments to be presently described and nally claimed.

In the following description reference 0 will be made to the'accompanying drawings in which C Figure 1 is a diagrammatic view of a sheet of crepe paper embodying features of the inventlon.

Fig. 2 isa similar view illustrating to an enlarged scale a transverse section of the pa r, and

(5:13 is a view similar to Fig. 2 illustrating a m 'fication in which both sides of the pa- 40 ger'are impregnated or coated in the manner escribed.

In the drawing 1 is a sheet of crepe paper having a deposit 2 of cleaning compound held in the folds 3 of the crimps and releasable by the stretching of the paper which occurs in 

